40 



CURRIE BROTHERS COMPANY, MILWAUKEE, WIS. 



SUPERIOR RE-CLEANED GRAINS. 



SEAMLESS BAGS. 20c EACH. 



.n\v. 



Sft- 



JAW;5£, 



maximum 



OATS. 



IMPROVED PRIZE CLUSTER. 



The Earliest of All Oats — A selection from the 

 original stock of Prize Cluster Oats that the 

 Director of the Iowa Experiment Station speaks 

 so highly of. In his report he places Prize- 

 Cluster at the head of the list of all varieties 

 tested, both for bulk of crop and weight per 

 bushel. It is a white variety, with very large 

 heads and heavy plump grain, straw of medium 

 growth, very strong. In our Improved Price 

 Cluster Oats we claim to have the best, heaviest 

 and thinnest shelled Oats in cultivation. 

 Peck 50c; bushel $1.50; 5 bushels for $7.00; 



10 bushels $13.50 



SWEDISH SELECT OATS. (Wis. IVo. 4.) 



Introduced by the U. S. Department of Agri- 

 culture a few years and now the most popular 

 Oats on the market. Its good points are earli- 

 ness, yield, fine appearance of grain, stiffness of 

 straw and freedom from rust and smut. It ap- 

 pears to be best adapted to -high land, the best 

 returns being obtained on clay loam. 



Peck 35c; bushel $1.15; 5 to 10 bushels $1.00; 15 to 50 bushels 

 90c. 



REGENERATED SWEDISH SELECT OATS. 

 The stock we offer was imported by us direct from the Gar- 

 ton Seed Co., England, who are the originators. By their 

 methods the yield and quality have been greatly improved. 

 The Oats this year actually weighs 50 lbs. to the bushel, and 

 the yield was about 25 per cent, more than the 

 yield of Swedish Select Oats in this country. 



Peck 85c; bushel (32 lbs.) $3.00; 2% bushels and over $2.75. 

 BICK WHEAT. 

 Silver Hull — This variety sown at the same time as the 

 common Buckwheat, matures a few days sooner, and 

 yields nearly double. The flour is whiter and more nu- 

 tritious. Peck 50c; bushel $1.50 



Japanese — An early and very prolific variety, with kernels 

 about double the size of ordinary sorts. It ripens a 

 week earlier than the Silver Hull and yields at least 



twice as much. Peek 50c; bushel $1.50 



Subject to market fluctuations. 



SPELTZ OR EMMER. 



Should Have a Place on All Farms, A Sure Cropper in Any 



Kind of Soil. Grand Drought Resister. 



Withstands the extremes of heat and cold better than 

 any cereal we know of. It is readily eaten by all kinds 

 of stock and its feeding qualities are excellent, is enor- 

 mously productive, and can be treated in the same man- 

 ner as other grain. Sow broadcast, using 60 lbs. per 

 acre. Weight per bushel 40 lbs. Peck 40c; bushel 

 $1.25; 5 bushels '....$6.00 



RYE. 



Rye is a crop that should be more extensively grown by all our farmers. It is a paying crop, 



even on poor sandy soils. It is also a very valuable crop with which to seed down grasses. 



IVew "Petkus" Winter Rye — A new Rye from Germany that will be of great value to the 

 farmers of Wisconsin. This new Rye came through the United States Department of Agri- 

 culture, Washington, to the Wisconsin Experiment Station, where it has been thoroughly 

 tested four years. We have the following report from the Wisconsin Experiment Sta- 

 tion: "Your letter of the 14th of November in regard to 'Petkus' Rye to hand. Have ex- 

 amined the record of this grain and find that it has yielded an average of 40.3 bushels per 

 acre for four years. The Rye grows tall and has long and well-filled heads. The grain 

 itself has the largest kernel of any Rye we have ever grown. It is rather light in color 

 and should make a very good grade of flour. In fact, it is recommended by the United States 

 Department of Agriculture as one of the best bread ryes grown in this country." In Ger- 

 many this Rye is much esteemed for making bread, and this together with its great pro- 

 ductiveness and strong stiff straw makes it particularly desirable. Peck 50c; bushel $1.50 



Spring — This Rye is invaluable as a catch crop for sowing where winter wheat has failed. 

 Peck 50c; bushel $1.50; 5 bushels $7.00 



Hungarian Winter — A remarkably hardy and strong-growing Rye of superior milling qual- 

 ities. Peck 40c; bushel $1.35; 5 bushels $6.50 



V 



IMPROVED PRIZE CLUSTER OATS. 



/ 



i"< . 



SPELTZ OK EMMER. 



